H.R. 1402 (119th)Bill Overview

TICKET Act

Commerce|CommerceCompetition and antitrust
Cosponsors
Support
Lean Republican
Introduced
Feb 18, 2025
Discussions
Bill Text
Current stageCommittee

Read twice. Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 163.

Introduced
Committee
Floor
President
Law
Congressional Activities
01 · The brief

The TICKET Act requires ticket sellers and secondary marketplaces to disclose a single "total event ticket price," itemize fees, and show that total price during the purchasing process.

It bans selling tickets that the seller does not actually possess (with a narrowly defined permitted "service" alternative), requires certain resale and affiliation disclosures, sets refund rules for cancellations and postponements, directs an FTC report on BOTS Act enforcement, and makes violations enforceable as unfair or deceptive acts under the FTC Act.

Most substantive consumer protections take effect 180 days after enactment and the law applies to events over 200-person capacity sold in interstate commerce.

Passage45/100

Content is popular consumer protection with low fiscal cost, but concentrated industry interests and Senate procedure risks reduce odds.

CredibilityPartial

How solid the drafting looks.

Contention68/100

Progressives emphasize consumer protection and anti-scalping measures.

02 · What it does

Who stands to gain, and who may push back.

Who this appears to help vs burden50% / 50%
ConsumersTargeted stakeholders
Likely helped
  • ConsumersReduces surprise fees by requiring total price and itemized fee disclosure to consumers.
  • ConsumersStrengthens consumer refunds by mandating full refunds for cancellations and options for postponements.
  • Targeted stakeholdersLimits speculative listings and potential fraudulent sales by banning offers without ticket possession.
Likely burdened
  • Targeted stakeholdersCompliance and technical changes will raise costs for ticketing platforms, venues, and sellers.
  • Targeted stakeholdersBan on speculative sales could reduce secondary market liquidity and limit resale availability.
  • Targeted stakeholdersRefund and replacement obligations may increase financial risk for promoters and smaller venues.
03 · Why people split

Why the argument around this bill splits.

Progressives emphasize consumer protection and anti-scalping measures.
Progressive90%

Likely supportive overall; views the bill as a meaningful consumer-protection measure to limit surprise fees and speculative scalping.

Appreciates the full-price disclosure, itemization of fees, refunds for cancellations, and the speculative-ticketing ban as curbs on abusive secondary-market practices.

Would want strong FTC enforcement and safeguards so fees aren't re-labeled as "optional" to evade disclosure.

Leans supportive
Centrist70%

Generally favorable to the consumer-transparency goals but cautious about implementation burdens and unintended market effects.

Sees value in clear pricing and refund rules while wanting practical guidance on compliance, narrow exemptions for genuine broker services, and clarity on the phrase "beyond reasonable control." Prefers monitoring and possible adjustments after FTC report.

Leans supportive
Conservative25%

Skeptical overall; supports transparency in principle but sees the bill as federal overreach and burdensome regulation on businesses and marketplaces.

Opposes the speculative-ticketing ban and mandatory refund rules as interventions that distort market bargaining and harm legitimate secondary-market services.

Concerned about litigation risk and expanded FTC authority.

Likely resistant
04 · Can it pass?

The path through Congress.

Introduced

Reached or meaningfully advanced

Committee

Reached or meaningfully advanced

Floor

Still ahead

President

Still ahead

Law

Still ahead

Passage likelihood45/100

Content is popular consumer protection with low fiscal cost, but concentrated industry interests and Senate procedure risks reduce odds.

Scope and complexity
52%
Scopemoderate
52%
Complexitymedium
Why this could stall
  • Strength and coordination of industry lobbying against provisions
  • FTC enforcement capacity and rulemaking timelines
05 · Recent votes

Recent votes on the bill.

06 · Go deeper

Go deeper than the headline read.

Included on this page

Progressives emphasize consumer protection and anti-scalping measures.

Content is popular consumer protection with low fiscal cost, but concentrated industry interests and Senate procedure risks reduce odds.

Unlocked analysis

Pro readers get the full perspective split, passage barriers, legislative design review, stakeholder impact map, and lens-based policy tradeoff analysis for TICKET Act.

Go beyond the headline summary with full stakeholder mapping, legislative design analysis, passage barriers, and lens-by-lens tradeoff breakdowns.

Perspective breakdownsPassage barriersLegislative design reviewStakeholder impact map
Open full analysis